Betty Reid Soskin - Sign My Name to Freedom - 1921-2025
The Kitchen Sisters Present
The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia
4.5 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 3 February 2026
⏱️ 30 minutes
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Summary
On December 21, 2025, activist and trailblazer Betty Reid Soskin passed away in Richmond, California. She was 104. Over the years we've chronicled Betty's remarkable story and want to share it today in honor of Betty and Black History Month.
In 2011, at age 89, Betty became America's oldest national park service ranger, a position she held until she retired at 100. Her bold and forthright tours and talks at the Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front Museum were legendary. As a Black woman who worked in the segregated war effort, she spoke from her personal experience revealing a fuller, richer understanding of the World War II years experienced by women and people of color on the home front.
Betty's Creole/Cajun family was from New Orleans and her great grandmother had been born into slavery in 1846. Displaced by the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927, Betty moved with her family to Oakland, where she grew up in the late 20s and 30s. During WWII she worked as a file clerk for Boilermakers Union A-36, a Jim Crow all Black union auxiliary, where she witnessed firsthand the discrimination faced by Black workers in the wartime industry.
Betty raised four children in the highly segregated Diablo Valley area where the family was subject to death threats. She and her first husband, Mel Reid, owned one of the first Black record shops west of the Mississippi located in Berkeley. She also worked as a Field Representative for California State Assembly women Dion Aroner and Lonnie Hancock. In 2016, at age 94, Betty survived a violent home invasion and returned to work at the Rosie the Riveter Museum just weeks later.
A singer, songwriter, poet and musician, Betty chronicled her life and work in a memoir, "Sign My Name to Freedom," which inspired both a stage play and a documentary film. Betty received numerous awards and honors throughout her life, including a presidential coin from Barack Obama in 2015 after she lit the national Christmas tree at the White House.
Special thanks to: The San Francisco Public Library and Shawna Sherman of the African American Center of the San Francisco Main Library; This is Love Podcast and creators Phoebe Judge and Lauren Spohrer; and A Lifetime of Being Betty, a Little Village Foundation recording release produced by Mike Kappus. Thanks also to Betty’s son, musician and songwriter Bob Reid http://www.bobreidmusic.com/
The Kitchen Sisters Present is produced by The Kitchen Sisters (Nikki Silva & Davia Nelson) with Nathan Dalton and Brandi Howell. We are part of the Radiotopia network from PRX.
Transcript
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| 0:49.9 | On December 21st, 2025, we lost our dear friend Betty Reid Soskham, an activist in Trailblazer who passed away in Richmond, California at 104 years of age. |
| 1:02.0 | Over the years, we've chronicled Betty's extraordinary life, and we wanted to share her story again today. |
| 1:09.0 | Until Betty retired at age 101, she was the nation's oldest |
| 1:13.2 | serving park ranger. She worked at the Rosie the Riveter, World War II Homefront |
| 1:18.1 | Historic Park. Her tours and talks were legendary. The year was 1927 and I was a six-year-old, |
| 1:30.3 | and that was the year that the city fathers in New Orleans chose to bomb the levees against the rising Mississippi to save the Garden |
| 1:37.9 | District in St. Charles Avenue, and they sacrificed the seventh and ninth wards, and the |
| 1:43.6 | Tramay, which was our ancestral home. |
| 1:46.7 | That was a year that my mother arrived at 6th Street, Southern Pacific Station, in Oakland, |
| 1:53.4 | with three little girls, everything we had left in a couple of cardboard suitcases, |
| 1:59.9 | a crucifix, to join George Allen, her father, |
| 2:05.1 | Papa George, my grandfather, who had settled here in Oakland at the end of the First World War |
| 2:11.5 | and was at that time working as a waiter at the Oakland Athletic Club, |
| 2:15.9 | sharing a little shotgun bungalow out in East Oakland |
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